reviewAnnual Review of EntomologySep 2, 2008Closed access

Insect Herbivore Nutrient Regulation

Texas A&M University

PubMed
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Abstract

The primary reason animals, including insect herbivores, eat is to acquire a mix of nutrients needed to fuel the processes of growth, development, and reproduction. Most insect herbivores strongly regulate their nutrient intake when given the opportunity. When they are restricted to imbalanced diets, they employ regulatory rules that govern the extent to which nutrients occurring in excess or deficit are eaten. Insect herbivores also regularly encounter allelochemicals as they eat, and recent work indicates the effect an allelochemical has on nutrient regulation, and insect herbivore performance, is modified depending on a food's nutrient composition. Comparative studies of nutrient regulation suggest…

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806
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100%
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Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Herbivore
  • Biology
  • Generalist and specialist species
  • Nutrient
  • Insect
  • Allelopathy
  • Ecology
  • Plant tolerance to herbivory
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Zero hunger
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